Business professors win national award

While more than 461 million people in China had mobile phones in 2006, it wasn't common at the time to use phones for data services, such as browsing the Internet.

To gain knowledge about what Chinese people want from their phones, June Lu, a University of Houston-Victoria management professor, and Chun-Sheng Yu, a UHV associate professor of management, teamed up with two colleagues from Illinois and China to publish a paper about the value of mobile data services.

Published in 2008 as one of the first papers about the subject, the authors have been frequently cited in further research.

The paper, "Determinants of Accepting Wireless Mobile Data Services in China," won a 2012 Emerald Management Reviews Citation of Excellence Award. The annual awards recognize the 50 most outstanding articles published by the top 300 management journals in the world. This paper is ranked No. 11 on the list.

The paper was published by the journal Information & Management. The awards are given out four years later to allow time for citation impact to be measured.

"This is a great honor," Lu said. "China has the largest number of mobile device users in the world, so mobile technology remains a hot topic there. Because our paper came out in 2008, it was one of the earlier articles on the subject."

Yu said he was excited when he found out they had won the honor.

"I am glad to have served as a co-author of this article," he said. "Being one of the top 50 articles from the top 300 management journals in the world shows that the research quality from the UHV business school faculty members can be favorably compared with work done by professors from research-oriented universities worldwide."

The other authors of the paper were Chang Liu, a business professor at Northern Illinois University; and Kanliang Wang, a professor at Xi'an Jiaotong University, in Xi'an, China. All four authors will receive an official certificate and badge.

The authors started the project in 2005 and concluded the study in 2007.

"We all thought the article had potential value for people who were carrying out research in mobile technology in China, so we submitted it to Information & Management," Lu said. "After two reviews, it was accepted and published."